Thursday, July 12, 2012

A Brief Excursus on Form and Tone




--> The work of the cinematograph is, it would seem, fundamentally a business of form and tone. Form is the regime of self-consistency and self-deviation; organic while also being like industrial scaffolding. Form is the incoherent coherence of a single world reduced down from the perceptually overloaded world in which we operate on a daily basis and with which we only interact at a level of minimal immersion by virtue of our occupying but a tiny micro-topography of the whole field of lived experience. Form is less the world of the film then it is the film as a world. The work of art becomes a little world all the parts of which are available for us to scrutinize, ultimately demonstrating its own limits by virtue of what it includes and excludes. Though it is totally reduced, there is no world more complete (not my world, for example, or your world) than that of the work of art. The shape of this world, its interior physics and intra-relational parameters, the constitutive rules it has set for how it conveys itself, the basic energy with which it situates its limits and boundaries, its tendency towards organizational self-reproduction and self-similarity, are all key to the work of art (especially the film, as film appropriates all of its sensory and psychic affects from poetry, literature, the theater, music, and painting – its is the great hybrid art par excellence). The preeminent filmmakers of form are Bresson and Hitchcock. Both tether the parts of their film-worlds together as a rigorous fixing of interstitially united fragments like pieces of a jigsaw that gradually come together in ways that produce sense (and awe). Tone, on the other hand, is the internal self-consistency of the work of art  as it operates in time over a certain duration and a plurality of micro-durations (those of the frame, the shot, the scene, the sequence). Tone is rhythm and counter-rhythm. It is how affect is deployed while the film is unraveling. Tone in the cinema is most related to tone in music, though I also think it is related to the tone of a painting insofar as the painting’s tone is explicitly inherent in the traces of the brushstrokes, the leftover evidence of the painter’s gestures in time. Tone is a part of everything. Tone is not just tone of voice (unless we consider that all things have their voices). Poetry is also extremely tonal in the way it moves, breaks, and flows (it is especially tonal, of course, when read aloud). The tendency is for us to think of filmmakers like Andrei Tarkovsky and Terrence Malick as the preeminent figures of tone (hence the use of the term “tone poem” to designate works by such filmmakers). This would be like saying that drone can be the only type of real tone is music. Think of the explosive, propulsive, and manic tone of films like those of Stan Brakhage or even the Soviet montage school (especially Dziga Vertov), which are closer to the tone of free jazz than they are to that of drone. There is tone at either extreme; the minimal and ascetic on the one hand and the maximalist and ecstatic on the other (the Dionysian). Discontinuity, contrapuntal affect, and rhythmic intransigence are not indicative of an absence of tone but are rather a different way of doing tonality. Tone works best not simply by being sustained and undifferentiated, but rather by demonstrating a musical logic of affect which is self-similar and subsumed by a kind of consistent, rhythmic logic. Films of poor tone tend to be like the paintings of an artist who dollops paint thoughtlessly on a canvas, hither and thither, without feeling it. Tone is ultimately a sensory-motor matter: something we feel in time. Form and tone work when we not only bear witness to them but rather feel and experience them at the sensory-motor level. A film ought to, first and foremost, work over the nervous system (and within the neural apparatus).